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Neuron

Within a nervous system, a neuron, neurone, or nerve cell is an electrically excitable cell that fires electric signals called action potentials across a neural network. Neurons communicate with other cells via synapses, which are specialized connections that commonly use minute amounts of chemical neurotransmitters to pass the electric signal from the presynaptic neuron to the target cell through the synaptic gap.

Neuron
Anatomy of a multipolar neuron
Identifiers
MeSHD009474
NeuroLex IDsao1417703748
TA98A14.0.00.002
THH2.00.06.1.00002
FMA54527
Anatomical terms of neuroanatomy
[edit on Wikidata]

Neurons are the main components of nervous tissue in all animals except sponges and placozoa. Non-animals like plants and fungi do not have nerve cells. Molecular evidence suggests that the ability to generate electric signals first appeared in evolution some 700 to 800 million years ago, during the Tonian period. Predecessors of neurons were the peptidergic secretory cells. They eventually gained new gene modules which enabled cells to create post-synaptic scaffolds and ion channels that generate fast electrical signals. The ability to generate electric signals was a key innovation in the evolution of the nervous system.[1]

Neurons are typically classified into three types based on their function. Sensory neurons respond to stimuli such as touch, sound, or light that affect the cells of the sensory organs, and they send signals to the spinal cord or brain. Motor neurons receive signals from the brain and spinal cord to control everything from muscle contractions[2] to glandular output. Interneurons connect neurons to other neurons within the same region of the brain or spinal cord. When multiple neurons are functionally connected together, they form what is called a neural circuit.

Neurons are special cells which are made up of some structures that are common to all other eukaryotic cells such as the cell body (soma), a nucleus, smooth and rough endoplasmic reticulum, Golgi apparatus, mitochondria, and other cellular components.[3] Additionally, neurons have other unique structures such as dendrites, and a single axon.[3] The soma is a compact structure, and the axon and dendrites are filaments extruding from the soma. Dendrites typically branch profusely and extend a few hundred micrometers from the soma. The axon leaves the soma at a swelling called the axon hillock and travels for as far as 1 meter in humans or more in other species. It branches but usually maintains a constant diameter. At the farthest tip of the axon's branches are axon terminals, where the neuron can transmit a signal across the synapse to another cell. Neurons may lack dendrites or have no axon. The term neurite is used to describe either a dendrite or an axon, particularly when the cell is undifferentiated.

Most neurons receive signals via the dendrites and soma and send out signals down the axon. At the majority of synapses, signals cross from the axon of one neuron to a dendrite of another. However, synapses can connect an axon to another axon or a dendrite to another dendrite.

The signaling process is partly electrical and partly chemical. Neurons are electrically excitable, due to maintenance of voltage gradients across their membranes. If the voltage changes by a large enough amount over a short interval, the neuron generates an all-or-nothing electrochemical pulse called an action potential. This potential travels rapidly along the axon and activates synaptic connections as it reaches them. Synaptic signals may be excitatory or inhibitory, increasing or reducing the net voltage that reaches the soma.

In most cases, neurons are generated by neural stem cells during brain development and childhood. Neurogenesis largely ceases during adulthood in most areas of the brain.

Nervous system edit

 
Schematic of an anatomically accurate single pyramidal neuron, the primary excitatory neuron of the cerebral cortex, with a synaptic connection from an incoming axon onto a dendritic spine

Neurons are the primary components of the nervous system, along with the glial cells that give them structural and metabolic support.[4] The nervous system is made up of the central nervous system, which includes the brain and spinal cord, and the peripheral nervous system, which includes the autonomic and somatic nervous systems.[5] In vertebrates, the majority of neurons belong to the central nervous system, but some reside in peripheral ganglia, and many sensory neurons are situated in sensory organs such as the retina and cochlea.

Axons may bundle into fascicles that make up the nerves in the peripheral nervous system (like strands of wire make up cables). Bundles of axons in the central nervous system are called tracts.

Anatomy and histology edit

 
Diagram of the components of a neuron

Neurons are highly specialized for the processing and transmission of cellular signals. Given their diversity of functions performed in different parts of the nervous system, there is a wide variety in their shape, size, and electrochemical properties. For instance, the soma of a neuron can vary from 4 to 100 micrometers in diameter.[6]

  • The soma is the body of the neuron. As it contains the nucleus, most protein synthesis occurs here. The nucleus can range from 3 to 18 micrometers in diameter.[7]
  • The dendrites of a neuron are cellular extensions with many branches. This overall shape and structure are referred to metaphorically as a dendritic tree. This is where the majority of input to the neuron occurs via the dendritic spine.
  • The axon is a finer, cable-like projection that can extend tens, hundreds, or even tens of thousands of times the diameter of the soma in length. The axon primarily carries nerve signals away from the soma and carries some types of information back to it. Many neurons have only one axon, but this axon may—and usually will—undergo extensive branching, enabling communication with many target cells. The part of the axon where it emerges from the soma is called the axon hillock. Besides being an anatomical structure, the axon hillock also has the greatest density of voltage-dependent sodium channels. This makes it the most easily excited part of the neuron and the spike initiation zone for the axon. In electrophysiological terms, it has the most negative threshold potential.
    • While the axon and axon hillock are generally involved in information outflow, this region can also receive input from other neurons.
  • The axon terminal is found at the end of the axon farthest from the soma and contains synapses. Synaptic boutons are specialized structures where neurotransmitter chemicals are released to communicate with target neurons. In addition to synaptic boutons at the axon terminal, a neuron may have en passant boutons, which are located along the length of the axon.
 
Neuron cell body

The accepted view of the neuron attributes dedicated functions to its various anatomical components; however, dendrites and axons often act in ways contrary to their so-called main function.[8]

 
Diagram of a typical myelinated vertebrate motor neuron
Neurology video

Axons and dendrites in the central nervous system are typically only about one micrometer thick, while some in the peripheral nervous system are much thicker. The soma is usually about 10–25 micrometers in diameter and often is not much larger than the cell nucleus it contains. The longest axon of a human motor neuron can be over a meter long, reaching from the base of the spine to the toes.

Sensory neurons can have axons that run from the toes to the posterior column of the spinal cord, over 1.5 meters in adults. Giraffes have single axons several meters in length running along the entire length of their necks. Much of what is known about axonal function comes from studying the squid giant axon, an ideal experimental preparation because of its relatively immense size (0.5–1 millimeter thick, several centimeters long).

Fully differentiated neurons are permanently postmitotic[9] however, stem cells present in the adult brain may regenerate functional neurons throughout the life of an organism (see neurogenesis). Astrocytes are star-shaped glial cells. They have been observed to turn into neurons by virtue of their stem cell-like characteristic of pluripotency.

Membrane edit

Like all animal cells, the cell body of every neuron is enclosed by a plasma membrane, a bilayer of lipid molecules with many types of protein structures embedded in it.[10] A lipid bilayer is a powerful electrical insulator, but in neurons, many of the protein structures embedded in the membrane are electrically active. These include ion channels that permit electrically charged ions to flow across the membrane and ion pumps that chemically transport ions from one side of the membrane to the other. Most ion channels are permeable only to specific types of ions. Some ion channels are voltage gated, meaning that they can be switched between open and closed states by altering the voltage difference across the membrane. Others are chemically gated, meaning that they can be switched between open and closed states by interactions with chemicals that diffuse through the extracellular fluid. The ion materials include sodium, potassium, chloride, and calcium. The interactions between ion channels and ion pumps produce a voltage difference across the membrane, typically a bit less than 1/10 of a volt at baseline. This voltage has two functions: first, it provides a power source for an assortment of voltage-dependent protein machinery that is embedded in the membrane; second, it provides a basis for electrical signal transmission between different parts of the membrane.

Histology and internal structure edit

 
Golgi-stained neurons in human hippocampal tissue
 
Actin filaments in a mouse cortical neuron in culture

Numerous microscopic clumps called Nissl bodies (or Nissl substance) are seen when nerve cell bodies are stained with a basophilic ("base-loving") dye. These structures consist of rough endoplasmic reticulum and associated ribosomal RNA. Named after German psychiatrist and neuropathologist Franz Nissl (1860–1919), they are involved in protein synthesis and their prominence can be explained by the fact that nerve cells are very metabolically active. Basophilic dyes such as aniline or (weakly) haematoxylin[11] highlight negatively charged components, and so bind to the phosphate backbone of the ribosomal RNA.

The cell body of a neuron is supported by a complex mesh of structural proteins called neurofilaments, which together with neurotubules (neuronal microtubules) are assembled into larger neurofibrils.[12] Some neurons also contain pigment granules, such as neuromelanin (a brownish-black pigment that is byproduct of synthesis of catecholamines), and lipofuscin (a yellowish-brown pigment), both of which accumulate with age.[13][14][15] Other structural proteins that are important for neuronal function are actin and the tubulin of microtubules. Class III β-tubulin is found almost exclusively in neurons. Actin is predominately found at the tips of axons and dendrites during neuronal development. There the actin dynamics can be modulated via an interplay with microtubule.[16]

There are different internal structural characteristics between axons and dendrites. Typical axons almost never contain ribosomes, except some in the initial segment. Dendrites contain granular endoplasmic reticulum or ribosomes, in diminishing amounts as the distance from the cell body increases.

Classification edit

 
Image of pyramidal neurons in mouse cerebral cortex expressing green fluorescent protein. The red staining indicates GABAergic interneurons.[17]
 
SMI32-stained pyramidal neurons in cerebral cortex

Neurons vary in shape and size and can be classified by their morphology and function.[18] The anatomist Camillo Golgi grouped neurons into two types; type I with long axons used to move signals over long distances and type II with short axons, which can often be confused with dendrites. Type I cells can be further classified by the location of the soma. The basic morphology of type I neurons, represented by spinal motor neurons, consists of a cell body called the soma and a long thin axon covered by a myelin sheath. The dendritic tree wraps around the cell body and receives signals from other neurons. The end of the axon has branching axon terminals that release neurotransmitters into a gap called the synaptic cleft between the terminals and the dendrites of the next neuron.[citation needed]

Structural classification edit

Polarity edit

 
Different kinds of neurons:
1 Unipolar neuron
2 Bipolar neuron
3 Multipolar neuron
4 Pseudounipolar neuron

Most neurons can be anatomically characterized as:[19]

  • Unipolar: single process. Unipolar cells are exclusively sensory neurons. Their dendrites are receiving sensory information, sometimes directly from the stimulus itself. The cell bodies of unipolar neurons are always found in ganglia. Sensory reception is a peripheral function, so the cell body is in the periphery, though closer to the CNS in a ganglion. The axon projects from the dendrite endings, past the cell body in a ganglion, and into the central nervous system.
  • Bipolar: 1 axon and 1 dendrite. They are found mainly in the olfactory epithelium, and as part of the retina.
  • Multipolar: 1 axon and 2 or more dendrites
    • Golgi I: neurons with long-projecting axonal processes; examples are pyramidal cells, Purkinje cells, and anterior horn cells
    • Golgi II: neurons whose axonal process projects locally; the best example is the granule cell
  • Anaxonic: where the axon cannot be distinguished from the dendrite(s)
  • Pseudounipolar: 1 process which then serves as both an axon and a dendrite

Other edit

Some unique neuronal types can be identified according to their location in the nervous system and distinct shape. Some examples are:[citation needed]

Functional classification edit

Direction edit

  • Afferent neurons convey information from tissues and organs into the central nervous system and are also called sensory neurons.
  • Efferent neurons (motor neurons) transmit signals from the central nervous system to the effector cells.
  • Interneurons connect neurons within specific regions of the central nervous system.

Afferent and efferent also refer generally to neurons that, respectively, bring information to or send information from the brain.

Action on other neurons edit

A neuron affects other neurons by releasing a neurotransmitter that binds to chemical receptors. The effect upon the postsynaptic neuron is determined by the type of receptor that is activated, not by the presynaptic neuron or by the neurotransmitter. A neurotransmitter can be thought of as a key, and a receptor as a lock: the same neurotransmitter can activate multiple types of receptors. Receptors can be classified broadly as excitatory (causing an increase in firing rate), inhibitory (causing a decrease in firing rate), or modulatory (causing long-lasting effects not directly related to firing rate).[citation needed]

The two most common (90%+) neurotransmitters in the brain, glutamate and GABA, have largely consistent actions. Glutamate acts on several types of receptors, and has effects that are excitatory at ionotropic receptors and a modulatory effect at metabotropic receptors. Similarly, GABA acts on several types of receptors, but all of them have inhibitory effects (in adult animals, at least). Because of this consistency, it is common for neuroscientists to refer to cells that release glutamate as "excitatory neurons", and cells that release GABA as "inhibitory neurons". Some other types of neurons have consistent effects, for example, "excitatory" motor neurons in the spinal cord that release acetylcholine, and "inhibitory" spinal neurons that release glycine.[citation needed]

The distinction between excitatory and inhibitory neurotransmitters is not absolute. Rather, it depends on the class of chemical receptors present on the postsynaptic neuron. In principle, a single neuron, releasing a single neurotransmitter, can have excitatory effects on some targets, inhibitory effects on others, and modulatory effects on others still. For example, photoreceptor cells in the retina constantly release the neurotransmitter glutamate in the absence of light. So-called OFF bipolar cells are, like most neurons, excited by the released glutamate. However, neighboring target neurons called ON bipolar cells are instead inhibited by glutamate, because they lack typical ionotropic glutamate receptors and instead express a class of inhibitory metabotropic glutamate receptors.[20] When light is present, the photoreceptors cease releasing glutamate, which relieves the ON bipolar cells from inhibition, activating them; this simultaneously removes the excitation from the OFF bipolar cells, silencing them.[citation needed]

It is possible to identify the type of inhibitory effect a presynaptic neuron will have on a postsynaptic neuron, based on the proteins the presynaptic neuron expresses. Parvalbumin-expressing neurons typically dampen the output signal of the postsynaptic neuron in the visual cortex, whereas somatostatin-expressing neurons typically block dendritic inputs to the postsynaptic neuron.[21]

Discharge patterns edit

Neurons have intrinsic electroresponsive properties like intrinsic transmembrane voltage oscillatory patterns.[22] So neurons can be classified according to their electrophysiological characteristics:

  • Tonic or regular spiking. Some neurons are typically constantly (tonically) active, typically firing at a constant frequency. Example: interneurons in neurostriatum.
  • Phasic or bursting. Neurons that fire in bursts are called phasic.
  • Fast spiking. Some neurons are notable for their high firing rates, for example some types of cortical inhibitory interneurons, cells in globus pallidus, retinal ganglion cells.[23][24]

Neurotransmitter edit

 
Synaptic vesicles containing neurotransmitters

Neurotransmitters are chemical messengers passed from one neuron to another neuron or to a muscle cell or gland cell.

  • Cholinergic neurons – acetylcholine. Acetylcholine is released from presynaptic neurons into the synaptic cleft. It acts as a ligand for both ligand-gated ion channels and metabotropic (GPCRs) muscarinic receptors. Nicotinic receptors are pentameric ligand-gated ion channels composed of alpha and beta subunits that bind nicotine. Ligand binding opens the channel causing influx of Na+ depolarization and increases the probability of presynaptic neurotransmitter release. Acetylcholine is synthesized from choline and acetyl coenzyme A.
  • Adrenergic neurons – noradrenaline. Noradrenaline (norepinephrine) is released from most postganglionic neurons in the sympathetic nervous system onto two sets of GPCRs: alpha adrenoceptors and beta adrenoceptors. Noradrenaline is one of the three common catecholamine neurotransmitter, and the most prevalent of them in the peripheral nervous system; as with other catecholamines, it is synthesised from tyrosine.
  • GABAergic neurons – gamma aminobutyric acid. GABA is one of two neuroinhibitors in the central nervous system (CNS), along with glycine. GABA has a homologous function to ACh, gating anion channels that allow Cl ions to enter the post synaptic neuron. Cl causes hyperpolarization within the neuron, decreasing the probability of an action potential firing as the voltage becomes more negative (for an action potential to fire, a positive voltage threshold must be reached). GABA is synthesized from glutamate neurotransmitters by the enzyme glutamate decarboxylase.
  • Glutamatergic neurons – glutamate. Glutamate is one of two primary excitatory amino acid neurotransmitters, along with aspartate. Glutamate receptors are one of four categories, three of which are ligand-gated ion channels and one of which is a G-protein coupled receptor (often referred to as GPCR).
  1. AMPA and Kainate receptors function as cation channels permeable to Na+ cation channels mediating fast excitatory synaptic transmission.
  2. NMDA receptors are another cation channel that is more permeable to Ca2+. The function of NMDA receptors depend on glycine receptor binding as a co-agonist within the channel pore. NMDA receptors do not function without both ligands present.
  3. Metabotropic receptors, GPCRs modulate synaptic transmission and postsynaptic excitability.
Glutamate can cause excitotoxicity when blood flow to the brain is interrupted, resulting in brain damage. When blood flow is suppressed, glutamate is released from presynaptic neurons, causing greater NMDA and AMPA receptor activation than normal outside of stress conditions, leading to elevated Ca2+ and Na+ entering the post synaptic neuron and cell damage. Glutamate is synthesized from the amino acid glutamine by the enzyme glutamate synthase.

Multimodel classification edit

Since 2012 there has been a push from the cellular and computational neuroscience community to come up with a universal classification of neurons that will apply to all neurons in the brain as well as across species. This is done by considering the three essential qualities of all neurons: electrophysiology, morphology, and the individual transcriptome of the cells. Besides being universal this classification has the advantage of being able to classify astrocytes as well. A method called patch-sequencing in which all three qualities can be measured at once is used extensively by the Allen Institute for Brain Science.[26] In 2023, a comprehensive cell atlas of the adult, and developing human brain at the transcriptional, epigenetic, and functional levels was created through an international collaboration of researchers using the most cutting-edge molecular biology approaches.[27]

Connectivity edit

 
A signal propagating down an axon to the cell body and dendrites of the next cell
 
Chemical synapse

Neurons communicate with each other via synapses, where either the axon terminal of one cell contacts another neuron's dendrite, soma or, less commonly, axon. Neurons such as Purkinje cells in the cerebellum can have over 1000 dendritic branches, making connections with tens of thousands of other cells; other neurons, such as the magnocellular neurons of the supraoptic nucleus, have only one or two dendrites, each of which receives thousands of synapses.

Synapses can be excitatory or inhibitory, either increasing or decreasing activity in the target neuron, respectively. Some neurons also communicate via electrical synapses, which are direct, electrically conductive junctions between cells.[28]

When an action potential reaches the axon terminal, it opens voltage-gated calcium channels, allowing calcium ions to enter the terminal. Calcium causes synaptic vesicles filled with neurotransmitter molecules to fuse with the membrane, releasing their contents into the synaptic cleft. The neurotransmitters diffuse across the synaptic cleft and activate receptors on the postsynaptic neuron. High cytosolic calcium in the axon terminal triggers mitochondrial calcium uptake, which, in turn, activates mitochondrial energy metabolism to produce ATP to support continuous neurotransmission.[29]

An autapse is a synapse in which a neuron's axon connects to its own dendrites.

The human brain has some 8.6 x 1010 (eighty six billion) neurons.[30][31] Each neuron has on average 7,000 synaptic connections to other neurons. It has been estimated that the brain of a three-year-old child has about 1015 synapses (1 quadrillion). This number declines with age, stabilizing by adulthood. Estimates vary for an adult, ranging from 1014 to 5 x 1014 synapses (100 to 500 trillion).[32]

 
An annotated diagram of the stages of an action potential propagating down an axon including the role of ion concentration and pump and channel proteins

Nonelectrochemical signaling edit

Beyond electrical and chemical signaling, studies suggest neurons in healthy human brains can also communicate through:

  • force generated by the enlargement of dendritic spines[33]
  • the transfer of proteins – transneuronally transported proteins (TNTPs)[34][35]

They can also get modulated by input from the environment and hormones released from other parts of the organism,[36] which could be influenced more or less directly by neurons. This also applies to neurotrophins such as BDNF. The gut microbiome is also connected with the brain.[37] Neurons also communicate with microglia, the brain's main immune cells via specialised contact sites, called "somatic junctions". These connections enable microglia to constantly monitor and regulate neuronal functions, and exert neuroprotection, when needed.[38]

Mechanisms for propagating action potentials edit

In 1937 John Zachary Young suggested that the squid giant axon could be used to study neuronal electrical properties.[39] It is larger than but similar to human neurons, making it easier to study. By inserting electrodes into the squid giant axons, accurate measurements were made of the membrane potential.

The cell membrane of the axon and soma contain voltage-gated ion channels that allow the neuron to generate and propagate an electrical signal (an action potential). Some neurons also generate subthreshold membrane potential oscillations. These signals are generated and propagated by charge-carrying ions including sodium (Na+), potassium (K+), chloride (Cl), and calcium (Ca2+).

Several stimuli can activate a neuron leading to electrical activity, including pressure, stretch, chemical transmitters, and changes of the electric potential across the cell membrane.[40] Stimuli cause specific ion-channels within the cell membrane to open, leading to a flow of ions through the cell membrane, changing the membrane potential. Neurons must maintain the specific electrical properties that define their neuron type.[41]

Thin neurons and axons require less metabolic expense to produce and carry action potentials, but thicker axons convey impulses more rapidly. To minimize metabolic expense while maintaining rapid conduction, many neurons have insulating sheaths of myelin around their axons. The sheaths are formed by glial cells: oligodendrocytes in the central nervous system and Schwann cells in the peripheral nervous system. The sheath enables action potentials to travel faster than in unmyelinated axons of the same diameter, whilst using less energy. The myelin sheath in peripheral nerves normally runs along the axon in sections about 1 mm long, punctuated by unsheathed nodes of Ranvier, which contain a high density of voltage-gated ion channels. Multiple sclerosis is a neurological disorder that results from demyelination of axons in the central nervous system.

Some neurons do not generate action potentials, but instead generate a graded electrical signal, which in turn causes graded neurotransmitter release. Such non-spiking neurons tend to be sensory neurons or interneurons, because they cannot carry signals long distances.

Neural coding edit

Neural coding is concerned with how sensory and other information is represented in the brain by neurons. The main goal of studying neural coding is to characterize the relationship between the stimulus and the individual or ensemble neuronal responses, and the relationships among the electrical activities of the neurons within the ensemble.[42] It is thought that neurons can encode both digital and analog information.[43]

All-or-none principle edit

 
As long as the stimulus reaches the threshold, the full response would be given. Larger stimulus does not result in a larger response, vice versa.[44]: 31 

The conduction of nerve impulses is an example of an all-or-none response. In other words, if a neuron responds at all, then it must respond completely. Greater intensity of stimulation, like brighter image/louder sound, does not produce a stronger signal, but can increase firing frequency.[44]: 31  Receptors respond in different ways to stimuli. Slowly adapting or tonic receptors respond to steady stimulus and produce a steady rate of firing. Tonic receptors most often respond to increased intensity of stimulus by increasing their firing frequency, usually as a power function of stimulus plotted against impulses per second. This can be likened to an intrinsic property of light where greater intensity of a specific frequency (color) requires more photons, as the photons can not become "stronger" for a specific frequency.

Other receptor types include quickly adapting or phasic receptors, where firing decreases or stops with steady stimulus; examples include skin which, when touched causes neurons to fire, but if the object maintains even pressure, the neurons stop firing. The neurons of the skin and muscles that are responsive to pressure and vibration have filtering accessory structures that aid their function.

The pacinian corpuscle is one such structure. It has concentric layers like an onion, which form around the axon terminal. When pressure is applied and the corpuscle is deformed, mechanical stimulus is transferred to the axon, which fires. If the pressure is steady, stimulus ends; thus, typically these neurons respond with a transient depolarization during the initial deformation and again when the pressure is removed, which causes the corpuscle to change shape again. Other types of adaptation are important in extending the function of a number of other neurons.[45]

Etymology and spelling edit

The German anatomist Heinrich Wilhelm Waldeyer introduced the term neuron in 1891,[46] based on the ancient Greek νεῦρον neuron 'sinew, cord, nerve'.[47]

The word was adopted in French with the spelling neurone. That spelling was also used by many writers in English,[48] but has now become rare in American usage and uncommon in British usage.[49][47]

History edit

 
Drawing by Camillo Golgi of a hippocampus stained using the silver nitrate method
 
Drawing of a Purkinje cell in the cerebellar cortex done by Santiago Ramón y Cajal, demonstrating the ability of Golgi's staining method to reveal fine detail

The neuron's place as the primary functional unit of the nervous system was first recognized in the late 19th century through the work of the Spanish anatomist Santiago Ramón y Cajal.[50]

To make the structure of individual neurons visible, Ramón y Cajal improved a silver staining process that had been developed by Camillo Golgi.[50] The improved process involves a technique called "double impregnation" and is still in use.

In 1888 Ramón y Cajal published a paper about the bird cerebellum. In this paper, he stated that he could not find evidence for anastomosis between axons and dendrites and called each nervous element "an absolutely autonomous canton."[50][46] This became known as the neuron doctrine, one of the central tenets of modern neuroscience.[50]

In 1891, the German anatomist Heinrich Wilhelm Waldeyer wrote a highly influential review of the neuron doctrine in which he introduced the term neuron to describe the anatomical and physiological unit of the nervous system.[51][52]

The silver impregnation stains are a useful method for neuroanatomical investigations because, for reasons unknown, it stains only a small percentage of cells in a tissue, exposing the complete micro structure of individual neurons without much overlap from other cells.[53]

Neuron doctrine edit

 
Drawing of neurons in the pigeon cerebellum, by Spanish neuroscientist Santiago Ramón y Cajal in 1899. (A) denotes Purkinje cells and (B) denotes granule cells, both of which are multipolar.

The neuron doctrine is the now fundamental idea that neurons are the basic structural and functional units of the nervous system. The theory was put forward by Santiago Ramón y Cajal in the late 19th century. It held that neurons are discrete cells (not connected in a meshwork), acting as metabolically distinct units.

Later discoveries yielded refinements to the doctrine. For example, glial cells, which are non-neuronal, play an essential role in information processing.[54] Also, electrical synapses are more common than previously thought,[55] comprising direct, cytoplasmic connections between neurons. In fact, neurons can form even tighter couplings: the squid giant axon arises from the fusion of multiple axons.[56]

Ramón y Cajal also postulated the Law of Dynamic Polarization, which states that a neuron receives signals at its dendrites and cell body and transmits them, as action potentials, along the axon in one direction: away from the cell body.[57] The Law of Dynamic Polarization has important exceptions; dendrites can serve as synaptic output sites of neurons[58] and axons can receive synaptic inputs.[59]

Compartmental modelling of neurons edit

Although neurons are often described of as "fundamental units" of the brain, they perform internal computations. Neurons integrate input within dendrites, and this complexity is lost in models that assume neurons to be a fundamental unit. Dendritic branches can be modeled as spatial compartments, whose activity is related due to passive membrane properties, but may also be different depending on input from synapses. Compartmental modelling of dendrites is especially helpful for understanding the behavior of neurons that are too small to record with electrodes, as is the case for Drosophila melanogaster.[60]

Neurons in the brain edit

The number of neurons in the brain varies dramatically from species to species.[61] In a human, there are an estimated 10–20 billion neurons in the cerebral cortex and 55–70 billion neurons in the cerebellum.[62] By contrast, the nematode worm Caenorhabditis elegans has just 302 neurons, making it an ideal model organism as scientists have been able to map all of its neurons. The fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster, a common subject in biological experiments, has around 100,000 neurons and exhibits many complex behaviors. Many properties of neurons, from the type of neurotransmitters used to ion channel composition, are maintained across species, allowing scientists to study processes occurring in more complex organisms in much simpler experimental systems.

Neurological disorders edit

Charcot–Marie–Tooth disease (CMT) is a heterogeneous inherited disorder of nerves (neuropathy) that is characterized by loss of muscle tissue and touch sensation, predominantly in the feet and legs extending to the hands and arms in advanced stages. Presently incurable, this disease is one of the most common inherited neurological disorders, affecting 36 in 100,000 people.[63]

Alzheimer's disease (AD), also known simply as Alzheimer's, is a neurodegenerative disease characterized by progressive cognitive deterioration, together with declining activities of daily living and neuropsychiatric symptoms or behavioral changes.[64] The most striking early symptom is loss of short-term memory (amnesia), which usually manifests as minor forgetfulness that becomes steadily more pronounced with illness progression, with relative preservation of older memories. As the disorder progresses, cognitive (intellectual) impairment extends to the domains of language (aphasia), skilled movements (apraxia), and recognition (agnosia), and functions such as decision-making and planning become impaired.[65][66]

Parkinson's disease (PD), also known as Parkinsons, is a degenerative disorder of the central nervous system that often impairs motor skills and speech.[67] Parkinson's disease belongs to a group of conditions called movement disorders.[68] It is characterized by muscle rigidity, tremor, a slowing of physical movement (bradykinesia), and in extreme cases, a loss of physical movement (akinesia). The primary symptoms are the results of decreased stimulation of the motor cortex by the basal ganglia, normally caused by the insufficient formation and action of dopamine, which is produced in the dopaminergic neurons of the brain. Secondary symptoms may include high level cognitive dysfunction and subtle language problems. PD is both chronic and progressive.

Myasthenia gravis is a neuromuscular disease leading to fluctuating muscle weakness and fatigability during simple activities. Weakness is typically caused by circulating antibodies that block acetylcholine receptors at the post-synaptic neuromuscular junction, inhibiting the stimulative effect of the neurotransmitter acetylcholine. Myasthenia is treated with immunosuppressants, cholinesterase inhibitors and, in selected cases, thymectomy.

Demyelination edit

 
Guillain–Barré syndrome – demyelination

Demyelination is the act of demyelinating, or the loss of the myelin sheath insulating the nerves. When myelin degrades, conduction of signals along the nerve can be impaired or lost, and the nerve eventually withers. This leads to certain neurodegenerative disorders like multiple sclerosis and chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy.

Axonal degeneration edit

Although most injury responses include a calcium influx signaling to promote resealing of severed parts, axonal injuries initially lead to acute axonal degeneration, which is the rapid separation of the proximal and distal ends, occurring within 30 minutes of injury.[69] Degeneration follows with swelling of the axolemma, and eventually leads to bead-like formation. Granular disintegration of the axonal cytoskeleton and inner organelles occurs after axolemma degradation. Early changes include accumulation of mitochondria in the paranodal regions at the site of injury. Endoplasmic reticulum degrades and mitochondria swell up and eventually disintegrate. The disintegration is dependent on ubiquitin and calpain proteases (caused by the influx of calcium ion), suggesting that axonal degeneration is an active process that produces complete fragmentation. The process takes about roughly 24 hours in the PNS and longer in the CNS. The signaling pathways leading to axolemma degeneration are unknown.

Neurogenesis edit

Neurons are born through the process of neurogenesis, in which neural stem cells divide to produce differentiated neurons. Once fully differentiated neurons are formed, they are no longer capable of undergoing mitosis. Neurogenesis primarily occurs in the embryo of most organisms.

Adult neurogenesis can occur and studies of the age of human neurons suggest that this process occurs only for a minority of cells, and that the vast majority of neurons in the neocortex forms before birth and persists without replacement. The extent to which adult neurogenesis exists in humans, and its contribution to cognition are controversial, with conflicting reports published in 2018.[70]

The body contains a variety of stem cell types that have the capacity to differentiate into neurons. Researchers found a way to transform human skin cells into nerve cells using transdifferentiation, in which "cells are forced to adopt new identities".[71]

During neurogenesis in the mammalian brain, progenitor and stem cells progress from proliferative divisions to differentiative divisions. This progression leads to the neurons and glia that populate cortical layers. Epigenetic modifications play a key role in regulating gene expression in differentiating neural stem cells, and are critical for cell fate determination in the developing and adult mammalian brain. Epigenetic modifications include DNA cytosine methylation to form 5-methylcytosine and 5-methylcytosine demethylation.[72] These modifications are critical for cell fate determination in the developing and adult mammalian brain. DNA cytosine methylation is catalyzed by DNA methyltransferases (DNMTs). Methylcytosine demethylation is catalyzed in several stages by TET enzymes that carry out oxidative reactions (e.g. 5-methylcytosine to 5-hydroxymethylcytosine) and enzymes of the DNA base excision repair (BER) pathway.[72]

At different stages of mammalian nervous system development two DNA repair processes are employed in the repair of DNA double-strand breaks. These pathways are homologous recombinational repair used in proliferating neural precursor cells, and non-homologous end joining used mainly at later developmental stages[73]

Intercellular communication between developing neurons and microglia is also indispensable for proper neurogenesis and brain development.[74]

Nerve regeneration edit

Peripheral axons can regrow if they are severed,[75] but one neuron cannot be functionally replaced by one of another type (Llinás' law).[22]

See also edit

References edit

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Further reading edit

  • Bullock TH, Bennett MV, Johnston D, Josephson R, Marder E, Fields RD (November 2005). "Neuroscience. The neuron doctrine, redux". Science. 310 (5749): 791–3. doi:10.1126/science.1114394. PMID 16272104. S2CID 170670241.
  • Kandel ER, Schwartz JH, Jessell TM (2000). Principles of Neural Science (4th ed.). New York: McGraw-Hill. ISBN 0-8385-7701-6.
  • Peters A, Palay SL, Webster HS (1991). The Fine Structure of the Nervous System (3rd ed.). New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-506571-9.
  • Ramón y Cajal S (1933). Histology (10th ed.). Baltimore: Wood.
  • Roberts A, Bush BM (1981). Neurones without Impulses. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-29935-7.
  • Snell RS (2010). Clinical Neuroanatomy. Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. ISBN 978-0-7817-9427-5.

External links edit

  • Neurobiology at Curlie
  • . Fostering neuroscience research especially in less well-funded countries.
  • NeuronBank an online neuromics tool for cataloging neuronal types and synaptic connectivity.
  • .
  • The Department of Neuroscience at Wikiversity, which presently offers two courses: Fundamentals of Neuroscience and Comparative Neuroscience.
  • NIF Search – Neuron 2015-01-22 at the Wayback Machine via the Neuroscience Information Framework
  • Complete list of neuron types according to the Petilla convention, at NeuroLex.
  • NeuroMorpho.Org an online database of digital reconstructions of neuronal morphology.
  • Khan Academy: Anatomy of a neuron
  • Neuron images

neuron, this, article, about, type, cell, other, uses, disambiguation, confused, with, neutron, within, nervous, system, neuron, neurone, nerve, cell, electrically, excitable, cell, that, fires, electric, signals, called, action, potentials, across, neural, ne. This article is about the type of cell For other uses see Neuron disambiguation Not to be confused with Neutron Within a nervous system a neuron neurone or nerve cell is an electrically excitable cell that fires electric signals called action potentials across a neural network Neurons communicate with other cells via synapses which are specialized connections that commonly use minute amounts of chemical neurotransmitters to pass the electric signal from the presynaptic neuron to the target cell through the synaptic gap NeuronAnatomy of a multipolar neuronIdentifiersMeSHD009474NeuroLex IDsao1417703748TA98A14 0 00 002THH2 00 06 1 00002FMA54527Anatomical terms of neuroanatomy edit on Wikidata Neurons are the main components of nervous tissue in all animals except sponges and placozoa Non animals like plants and fungi do not have nerve cells Molecular evidence suggests that the ability to generate electric signals first appeared in evolution some 700 to 800 million years ago during the Tonian period Predecessors of neurons were the peptidergic secretory cells They eventually gained new gene modules which enabled cells to create post synaptic scaffolds and ion channels that generate fast electrical signals The ability to generate electric signals was a key innovation in the evolution of the nervous system 1 Neurons are typically classified into three types based on their function Sensory neurons respond to stimuli such as touch sound or light that affect the cells of the sensory organs and they send signals to the spinal cord or brain Motor neurons receive signals from the brain and spinal cord to control everything from muscle contractions 2 to glandular output Interneurons connect neurons to other neurons within the same region of the brain or spinal cord When multiple neurons are functionally connected together they form what is called a neural circuit Neurons are special cells which are made up of some structures that are common to all other eukaryotic cells such as the cell body soma a nucleus smooth and rough endoplasmic reticulum Golgi apparatus mitochondria and other cellular components 3 Additionally neurons have other unique structures such as dendrites and a single axon 3 The soma is a compact structure and the axon and dendrites are filaments extruding from the soma Dendrites typically branch profusely and extend a few hundred micrometers from the soma The axon leaves the soma at a swelling called the axon hillock and travels for as far as 1 meter in humans or more in other species It branches but usually maintains a constant diameter At the farthest tip of the axon s branches are axon terminals where the neuron can transmit a signal across the synapse to another cell Neurons may lack dendrites or have no axon The term neurite is used to describe either a dendrite or an axon particularly when the cell is undifferentiated Most neurons receive signals via the dendrites and soma and send out signals down the axon At the majority of synapses signals cross from the axon of one neuron to a dendrite of another However synapses can connect an axon to another axon or a dendrite to another dendrite The signaling process is partly electrical and partly chemical Neurons are electrically excitable due to maintenance of voltage gradients across their membranes If the voltage changes by a large enough amount over a short interval the neuron generates an all or nothing electrochemical pulse called an action potential This potential travels rapidly along the axon and activates synaptic connections as it reaches them Synaptic signals may be excitatory or inhibitory increasing or reducing the net voltage that reaches the soma In most cases neurons are generated by neural stem cells during brain development and childhood Neurogenesis largely ceases during adulthood in most areas of the brain Contents 1 Nervous system 2 Anatomy and histology 2 1 Membrane 2 2 Histology and internal structure 3 Classification 3 1 Structural classification 3 1 1 Polarity 3 1 2 Other 3 2 Functional classification 3 2 1 Direction 3 2 2 Action on other neurons 3 2 3 Discharge patterns 3 2 4 Neurotransmitter 3 2 5 Multimodel classification 4 Connectivity 4 1 Nonelectrochemical signaling 5 Mechanisms for propagating action potentials 6 Neural coding 7 All or none principle 8 Etymology and spelling 9 History 9 1 Neuron doctrine 9 2 Compartmental modelling of neurons 10 Neurons in the brain 11 Neurological disorders 11 1 Demyelination 11 2 Axonal degeneration 12 Neurogenesis 13 Nerve regeneration 14 See also 15 References 16 Further reading 17 External linksNervous system edit nbsp Schematic of an anatomically accurate single pyramidal neuron the primary excitatory neuron of the cerebral cortex with a synaptic connection from an incoming axon onto a dendritic spineNeurons are the primary components of the nervous system along with the glial cells that give them structural and metabolic support 4 The nervous system is made up of the central nervous system which includes the brain and spinal cord and the peripheral nervous system which includes the autonomic and somatic nervous systems 5 In vertebrates the majority of neurons belong to the central nervous system but some reside in peripheral ganglia and many sensory neurons are situated in sensory organs such as the retina and cochlea Axons may bundle into fascicles that make up the nerves in the peripheral nervous system like strands of wire make up cables Bundles of axons in the central nervous system are called tracts Anatomy and histology edit nbsp Diagram of the components of a neuronNeurons are highly specialized for the processing and transmission of cellular signals Given their diversity of functions performed in different parts of the nervous system there is a wide variety in their shape size and electrochemical properties For instance the soma of a neuron can vary from 4 to 100 micrometers in diameter 6 The soma is the body of the neuron As it contains the nucleus most protein synthesis occurs here The nucleus can range from 3 to 18 micrometers in diameter 7 The dendrites of a neuron are cellular extensions with many branches This overall shape and structure are referred to metaphorically as a dendritic tree This is where the majority of input to the neuron occurs via the dendritic spine The axon is a finer cable like projection that can extend tens hundreds or even tens of thousands of times the diameter of the soma in length The axon primarily carries nerve signals away from the soma and carries some types of information back to it Many neurons have only one axon but this axon may and usually will undergo extensive branching enabling communication with many target cells The part of the axon where it emerges from the soma is called the axon hillock Besides being an anatomical structure the axon hillock also has the greatest density of voltage dependent sodium channels This makes it the most easily excited part of the neuron and the spike initiation zone for the axon In electrophysiological terms it has the most negative threshold potential While the axon and axon hillock are generally involved in information outflow this region can also receive input from other neurons The axon terminal is found at the end of the axon farthest from the soma and contains synapses Synaptic boutons are specialized structures where neurotransmitter chemicals are released to communicate with target neurons In addition to synaptic boutons at the axon terminal a neuron may have en passant boutons which are located along the length of the axon nbsp Neuron cell bodyThe accepted view of the neuron attributes dedicated functions to its various anatomical components however dendrites and axons often act in ways contrary to their so called main function 8 nbsp Diagram of a typical myelinated vertebrate motor neuron source source source source source source source Neurology videoAxons and dendrites in the central nervous system are typically only about one micrometer thick while some in the peripheral nervous system are much thicker The soma is usually about 10 25 micrometers in diameter and often is not much larger than the cell nucleus it contains The longest axon of a human motor neuron can be over a meter long reaching from the base of the spine to the toes Sensory neurons can have axons that run from the toes to the posterior column of the spinal cord over 1 5 meters in adults Giraffes have single axons several meters in length running along the entire length of their necks Much of what is known about axonal function comes from studying the squid giant axon an ideal experimental preparation because of its relatively immense size 0 5 1 millimeter thick several centimeters long Fully differentiated neurons are permanently postmitotic 9 however stem cells present in the adult brain may regenerate functional neurons throughout the life of an organism see neurogenesis Astrocytes are star shaped glial cells They have been observed to turn into neurons by virtue of their stem cell like characteristic of pluripotency Membrane edit Like all animal cells the cell body of every neuron is enclosed by a plasma membrane a bilayer of lipid molecules with many types of protein structures embedded in it 10 A lipid bilayer is a powerful electrical insulator but in neurons many of the protein structures embedded in the membrane are electrically active These include ion channels that permit electrically charged ions to flow across the membrane and ion pumps that chemically transport ions from one side of the membrane to the other Most ion channels are permeable only to specific types of ions Some ion channels are voltage gated meaning that they can be switched between open and closed states by altering the voltage difference across the membrane Others are chemically gated meaning that they can be switched between open and closed states by interactions with chemicals that diffuse through the extracellular fluid The ion materials include sodium potassium chloride and calcium The interactions between ion channels and ion pumps produce a voltage difference across the membrane typically a bit less than 1 10 of a volt at baseline This voltage has two functions first it provides a power source for an assortment of voltage dependent protein machinery that is embedded in the membrane second it provides a basis for electrical signal transmission between different parts of the membrane Histology and internal structure edit nbsp Golgi stained neurons in human hippocampal tissue nbsp Actin filaments in a mouse cortical neuron in cultureNumerous microscopic clumps called Nissl bodies or Nissl substance are seen when nerve cell bodies are stained with a basophilic base loving dye These structures consist of rough endoplasmic reticulum and associated ribosomal RNA Named after German psychiatrist and neuropathologist Franz Nissl 1860 1919 they are involved in protein synthesis and their prominence can be explained by the fact that nerve cells are very metabolically active Basophilic dyes such as aniline or weakly haematoxylin 11 highlight negatively charged components and so bind to the phosphate backbone of the ribosomal RNA The cell body of a neuron is supported by a complex mesh of structural proteins called neurofilaments which together with neurotubules neuronal microtubules are assembled into larger neurofibrils 12 Some neurons also contain pigment granules such as neuromelanin a brownish black pigment that is byproduct of synthesis of catecholamines and lipofuscin a yellowish brown pigment both of which accumulate with age 13 14 15 Other structural proteins that are important for neuronal function are actin and the tubulin of microtubules Class III b tubulin is found almost exclusively in neurons Actin is predominately found at the tips of axons and dendrites during neuronal development There the actin dynamics can be modulated via an interplay with microtubule 16 There are different internal structural characteristics between axons and dendrites Typical axons almost never contain ribosomes except some in the initial segment Dendrites contain granular endoplasmic reticulum or ribosomes in diminishing amounts as the distance from the cell body increases Classification edit nbsp Image of pyramidal neurons in mouse cerebral cortex expressing green fluorescent protein The red staining indicates GABAergic interneurons 17 nbsp SMI32 stained pyramidal neurons in cerebral cortexSee also List of distinct cell types in the adult human body Nervous system Neurons vary in shape and size and can be classified by their morphology and function 18 The anatomist Camillo Golgi grouped neurons into two types type I with long axons used to move signals over long distances and type II with short axons which can often be confused with dendrites Type I cells can be further classified by the location of the soma The basic morphology of type I neurons represented by spinal motor neurons consists of a cell body called the soma and a long thin axon covered by a myelin sheath The dendritic tree wraps around the cell body and receives signals from other neurons The end of the axon has branching axon terminals that release neurotransmitters into a gap called the synaptic cleft between the terminals and the dendrites of the next neuron citation needed Structural classification edit Polarity edit nbsp Different kinds of neurons 1 Unipolar neuron2 Bipolar neuron3 Multipolar neuron4 Pseudounipolar neuronMost neurons can be anatomically characterized as 19 Unipolar single process Unipolar cells are exclusively sensory neurons Their dendrites are receiving sensory information sometimes directly from the stimulus itself The cell bodies of unipolar neurons are always found in ganglia Sensory reception is a peripheral function so the cell body is in the periphery though closer to the CNS in a ganglion The axon projects from the dendrite endings past the cell body in a ganglion and into the central nervous system Bipolar 1 axon and 1 dendrite They are found mainly in the olfactory epithelium and as part of the retina Multipolar 1 axon and 2 or more dendrites Golgi I neurons with long projecting axonal processes examples are pyramidal cells Purkinje cells and anterior horn cells Golgi II neurons whose axonal process projects locally the best example is the granule cell Anaxonic where the axon cannot be distinguished from the dendrite s Pseudounipolar 1 process which then serves as both an axon and a dendriteOther edit Some unique neuronal types can be identified according to their location in the nervous system and distinct shape Some examples are citation needed Basket cells interneurons that form a dense plexus of terminals around the soma of target cells found in the cortex and cerebellum Betz cells large motor neurons Lugaro cells interneurons of the cerebellum Medium spiny neurons most neurons in the corpus striatum Purkinje cells huge neurons in the cerebellum a type of Golgi I multipolar neuron Pyramidal cells neurons with triangular soma a type of Golgi I Rosehip cells unique human inhibitory neurons that interconnect with Pyramidal cells Renshaw cells neurons with both ends linked to alpha motor neurons Unipolar brush cells interneurons with unique dendrite ending in a brush like tuft Granule cells a type of Golgi II neuron Anterior horn cells motoneurons located in the spinal cord Spindle cells interneurons that connect widely separated areas of the brainFunctional classification edit Direction edit Afferent neurons convey information from tissues and organs into the central nervous system and are also called sensory neurons Efferent neurons motor neurons transmit signals from the central nervous system to the effector cells Interneurons connect neurons within specific regions of the central nervous system Afferent and efferent also refer generally to neurons that respectively bring information to or send information from the brain Action on other neurons edit A neuron affects other neurons by releasing a neurotransmitter that binds to chemical receptors The effect upon the postsynaptic neuron is determined by the type of receptor that is activated not by the presynaptic neuron or by the neurotransmitter A neurotransmitter can be thought of as a key and a receptor as a lock the same neurotransmitter can activate multiple types of receptors Receptors can be classified broadly as excitatory causing an increase in firing rate inhibitory causing a decrease in firing rate or modulatory causing long lasting effects not directly related to firing rate citation needed The two most common 90 neurotransmitters in the brain glutamate and GABA have largely consistent actions Glutamate acts on several types of receptors and has effects that are excitatory at ionotropic receptors and a modulatory effect at metabotropic receptors Similarly GABA acts on several types of receptors but all of them have inhibitory effects in adult animals at least Because of this consistency it is common for neuroscientists to refer to cells that release glutamate as excitatory neurons and cells that release GABA as inhibitory neurons Some other types of neurons have consistent effects for example excitatory motor neurons in the spinal cord that release acetylcholine and inhibitory spinal neurons that release glycine citation needed The distinction between excitatory and inhibitory neurotransmitters is not absolute Rather it depends on the class of chemical receptors present on the postsynaptic neuron In principle a single neuron releasing a single neurotransmitter can have excitatory effects on some targets inhibitory effects on others and modulatory effects on others still For example photoreceptor cells in the retina constantly release the neurotransmitter glutamate in the absence of light So called OFF bipolar cells are like most neurons excited by the released glutamate However neighboring target neurons called ON bipolar cells are instead inhibited by glutamate because they lack typical ionotropic glutamate receptors and instead express a class of inhibitory metabotropic glutamate receptors 20 When light is present the photoreceptors cease releasing glutamate which relieves the ON bipolar cells from inhibition activating them this simultaneously removes the excitation from the OFF bipolar cells silencing them citation needed It is possible to identify the type of inhibitory effect a presynaptic neuron will have on a postsynaptic neuron based on the proteins the presynaptic neuron expresses Parvalbumin expressing neurons typically dampen the output signal of the postsynaptic neuron in the visual cortex whereas somatostatin expressing neurons typically block dendritic inputs to the postsynaptic neuron 21 Discharge patterns edit Neurons have intrinsic electroresponsive properties like intrinsic transmembrane voltage oscillatory patterns 22 So neurons can be classified according to their electrophysiological characteristics Tonic or regular spiking Some neurons are typically constantly tonically active typically firing at a constant frequency Example interneurons in neurostriatum Phasic or bursting Neurons that fire in bursts are called phasic Fast spiking Some neurons are notable for their high firing rates for example some types of cortical inhibitory interneurons cells in globus pallidus retinal ganglion cells 23 24 Neurotransmitter edit nbsp Synaptic vesicles containing neurotransmittersMain article Neurotransmitter Neurotransmitters are chemical messengers passed from one neuron to another neuron or to a muscle cell or gland cell Cholinergic neurons acetylcholine Acetylcholine is released from presynaptic neurons into the synaptic cleft It acts as a ligand for both ligand gated ion channels and metabotropic GPCRs muscarinic receptors Nicotinic receptors are pentameric ligand gated ion channels composed of alpha and beta subunits that bind nicotine Ligand binding opens the channel causing influx of Na depolarization and increases the probability of presynaptic neurotransmitter release Acetylcholine is synthesized from choline and acetyl coenzyme A Adrenergic neurons noradrenaline Noradrenaline norepinephrine is released from most postganglionic neurons in the sympathetic nervous system onto two sets of GPCRs alpha adrenoceptors and beta adrenoceptors Noradrenaline is one of the three common catecholamine neurotransmitter and the most prevalent of them in the peripheral nervous system as with other catecholamines it is synthesised from tyrosine GABAergic neurons gamma aminobutyric acid GABA is one of two neuroinhibitors in the central nervous system CNS along with glycine GABA has a homologous function to ACh gating anion channels that allow Cl ions to enter the post synaptic neuron Cl causes hyperpolarization within the neuron decreasing the probability of an action potential firing as the voltage becomes more negative for an action potential to fire a positive voltage threshold must be reached GABA is synthesized from glutamate neurotransmitters by the enzyme glutamate decarboxylase Glutamatergic neurons glutamate Glutamate is one of two primary excitatory amino acid neurotransmitters along with aspartate Glutamate receptors are one of four categories three of which are ligand gated ion channels and one of which is a G protein coupled receptor often referred to as GPCR AMPA and Kainate receptors function as cation channels permeable to Na cation channels mediating fast excitatory synaptic transmission NMDA receptors are another cation channel that is more permeable to Ca2 The function of NMDA receptors depend on glycine receptor binding as a co agonist within the channel pore NMDA receptors do not function without both ligands present Metabotropic receptors GPCRs modulate synaptic transmission and postsynaptic excitability Glutamate can cause excitotoxicity when blood flow to the brain is interrupted resulting in brain damage When blood flow is suppressed glutamate is released from presynaptic neurons causing greater NMDA and AMPA receptor activation than normal outside of stress conditions leading to elevated Ca2 and Na entering the post synaptic neuron and cell damage Glutamate is synthesized from the amino acid glutamine by the enzyme glutamate synthase dd Dopaminergic neurons dopamine Dopamine is a neurotransmitter that acts on D1 type D1 and D5 Gs coupled receptors which increase cAMP and PKA and D2 type D2 D3 and D4 receptors which activate Gi coupled receptors that decrease cAMP and PKA Dopamine is connected to mood and behavior and modulates both pre and post synaptic neurotransmission Loss of dopamine neurons in the substantia nigra has been linked to Parkinson s disease Dopamine is synthesized from the amino acid tyrosine Tyrosine is catalyzed into levodopa or L DOPA by tyrosine hydroxlase and levodopa is then converted into dopamine by the aromatic amino acid decarboxylase Serotonergic neurons serotonin Serotonin 5 Hydroxytryptamine 5 HT can act as excitatory or inhibitory Of its four 5 HT receptor classes 3 are GPCR and 1 is a ligand gated cation channel Serotonin is synthesized from tryptophan by tryptophan hydroxylase and then further by decarboxylase A lack of 5 HT at postsynaptic neurons has been linked to depression Drugs that block the presynaptic serotonin transporter are used for treatment such as Prozac and Zoloft Purinergic neurons ATP ATP is a neurotransmitter acting at both ligand gated ion channels P2X receptors and GPCRs P2Y receptors ATP is however best known as a cotransmitter Such purinergic signalling can also be mediated by other purines like adenosine which particularly acts at P2Y receptors Histaminergic neurons histamine Histamine is a monoamine neurotransmitter and neuromodulator Histamine producing neurons are found in the tuberomammillary nucleus of the hypothalamus 25 Histamine is involved in arousal and regulating sleep wake behaviors Multimodel classification edit Since 2012 there has been a push from the cellular and computational neuroscience community to come up with a universal classification of neurons that will apply to all neurons in the brain as well as across species This is done by considering the three essential qualities of all neurons electrophysiology morphology and the individual transcriptome of the cells Besides being universal this classification has the advantage of being able to classify astrocytes as well A method called patch sequencing in which all three qualities can be measured at once is used extensively by the Allen Institute for Brain Science 26 In 2023 a comprehensive cell atlas of the adult and developing human brain at the transcriptional epigenetic and functional levels was created through an international collaboration of researchers using the most cutting edge molecular biology approaches 27 Connectivity editMain articles Synapse and Chemical synapse nbsp A signal propagating down an axon to the cell body and dendrites of the next cell nbsp Chemical synapseNeurons communicate with each other via synapses where either the axon terminal of one cell contacts another neuron s dendrite soma or less commonly axon Neurons such as Purkinje cells in the cerebellum can have over 1000 dendritic branches making connections with tens of thousands of other cells other neurons such as the magnocellular neurons of the supraoptic nucleus have only one or two dendrites each of which receives thousands of synapses Synapses can be excitatory or inhibitory either increasing or decreasing activity in the target neuron respectively Some neurons also communicate via electrical synapses which are direct electrically conductive junctions between cells 28 When an action potential reaches the axon terminal it opens voltage gated calcium channels allowing calcium ions to enter the terminal Calcium causes synaptic vesicles filled with neurotransmitter molecules to fuse with the membrane releasing their contents into the synaptic cleft The neurotransmitters diffuse across the synaptic cleft and activate receptors on the postsynaptic neuron High cytosolic calcium in the axon terminal triggers mitochondrial calcium uptake which in turn activates mitochondrial energy metabolism to produce ATP to support continuous neurotransmission 29 An autapse is a synapse in which a neuron s axon connects to its own dendrites The human brain has some 8 6 x 1010 eighty six billion neurons 30 31 Each neuron has on average 7 000 synaptic connections to other neurons It has been estimated that the brain of a three year old child has about 1015 synapses 1 quadrillion This number declines with age stabilizing by adulthood Estimates vary for an adult ranging from 1014 to 5 x 1014 synapses 100 to 500 trillion 32 nbsp An annotated diagram of the stages of an action potential propagating down an axon including the role of ion concentration and pump and channel proteinsNonelectrochemical signaling edit Beyond electrical and chemical signaling studies suggest neurons in healthy human brains can also communicate through force generated by the enlargement of dendritic spines 33 the transfer of proteins transneuronally transported proteins TNTPs 34 35 They can also get modulated by input from the environment and hormones released from other parts of the organism 36 which could be influenced more or less directly by neurons This also applies to neurotrophins such as BDNF The gut microbiome is also connected with the brain 37 Neurons also communicate with microglia the brain s main immune cells via specialised contact sites called somatic junctions These connections enable microglia to constantly monitor and regulate neuronal functions and exert neuroprotection when needed 38 Mechanisms for propagating action potentials editIn 1937 John Zachary Young suggested that the squid giant axon could be used to study neuronal electrical properties 39 It is larger than but similar to human neurons making it easier to study By inserting electrodes into the squid giant axons accurate measurements were made of the membrane potential The cell membrane of the axon and soma contain voltage gated ion channels that allow the neuron to generate and propagate an electrical signal an action potential Some neurons also generate subthreshold membrane potential oscillations These signals are generated and propagated by charge carrying ions including sodium Na potassium K chloride Cl and calcium Ca2 Several stimuli can activate a neuron leading to electrical activity including pressure stretch chemical transmitters and changes of the electric potential across the cell membrane 40 Stimuli cause specific ion channels within the cell membrane to open leading to a flow of ions through the cell membrane changing the membrane potential Neurons must maintain the specific electrical properties that define their neuron type 41 Thin neurons and axons require less metabolic expense to produce and carry action potentials but thicker axons convey impulses more rapidly To minimize metabolic expense while maintaining rapid conduction many neurons have insulating sheaths of myelin around their axons The sheaths are formed by glial cells oligodendrocytes in the central nervous system and Schwann cells in the peripheral nervous system The sheath enables action potentials to travel faster than in unmyelinated axons of the same diameter whilst using less energy The myelin sheath in peripheral nerves normally runs along the axon in sections about 1 mm long punctuated by unsheathed nodes of Ranvier which contain a high density of voltage gated ion channels Multiple sclerosis is a neurological disorder that results from demyelination of axons in the central nervous system Some neurons do not generate action potentials but instead generate a graded electrical signal which in turn causes graded neurotransmitter release Such non spiking neurons tend to be sensory neurons or interneurons because they cannot carry signals long distances Neural coding editNeural coding is concerned with how sensory and other information is represented in the brain by neurons The main goal of studying neural coding is to characterize the relationship between the stimulus and the individual or ensemble neuronal responses and the relationships among the electrical activities of the neurons within the ensemble 42 It is thought that neurons can encode both digital and analog information 43 All or none principle edit nbsp As long as the stimulus reaches the threshold the full response would be given Larger stimulus does not result in a larger response vice versa 44 31 Main article All or none law The conduction of nerve impulses is an example of an all or none response In other words if a neuron responds at all then it must respond completely Greater intensity of stimulation like brighter image louder sound does not produce a stronger signal but can increase firing frequency 44 31 Receptors respond in different ways to stimuli Slowly adapting or tonic receptors respond to steady stimulus and produce a steady rate of firing Tonic receptors most often respond to increased intensity of stimulus by increasing their firing frequency usually as a power function of stimulus plotted against impulses per second This can be likened to an intrinsic property of light where greater intensity of a specific frequency color requires more photons as the photons can not become stronger for a specific frequency Other receptor types include quickly adapting or phasic receptors where firing decreases or stops with steady stimulus examples include skin which when touched causes neurons to fire but if the object maintains even pressure the neurons stop firing The neurons of the skin and muscles that are responsive to pressure and vibration have filtering accessory structures that aid their function The pacinian corpuscle is one such structure It has concentric layers like an onion which form around the axon terminal When pressure is applied and the corpuscle is deformed mechanical stimulus is transferred to the axon which fires If the pressure is steady stimulus ends thus typically these neurons respond with a transient depolarization during the initial deformation and again when the pressure is removed which causes the corpuscle to change shape again Other types of adaptation are important in extending the function of a number of other neurons 45 Etymology and spelling editThe German anatomist Heinrich Wilhelm Waldeyer introduced the term neuron in 1891 46 based on the ancient Greek neῦron neuron sinew cord nerve 47 The word was adopted in French with the spelling neurone That spelling was also used by many writers in English 48 but has now become rare in American usage and uncommon in British usage 49 47 History editFurther information History of neuroscience nbsp Drawing by Camillo Golgi of a hippocampus stained using the silver nitrate method nbsp Drawing of a Purkinje cell in the cerebellar cortex done by Santiago Ramon y Cajal demonstrating the ability of Golgi s staining method to reveal fine detailThe neuron s place as the primary functional unit of the nervous system was first recognized in the late 19th century through the work of the Spanish anatomist Santiago Ramon y Cajal 50 To make the structure of individual neurons visible Ramon y Cajal improved a silver staining process that had been developed by Camillo Golgi 50 The improved process involves a technique called double impregnation and is still in use In 1888 Ramon y Cajal published a paper about the bird cerebellum In this paper he stated that he could not find evidence for anastomosis between axons and dendrites and called each nervous element an absolutely autonomous canton 50 46 This became known as the neuron doctrine one of the central tenets of modern neuroscience 50 In 1891 the German anatomist Heinrich Wilhelm Waldeyer wrote a highly influential review of the neuron doctrine in which he introduced the term neuron to describe the anatomical and physiological unit of the nervous system 51 52 The silver impregnation stains are a useful method for neuroanatomical investigations because for reasons unknown it stains only a small percentage of cells in a tissue exposing the complete micro structure of individual neurons without much overlap from other cells 53 Neuron doctrine edit nbsp Drawing of neurons in the pigeon cerebellum by Spanish neuroscientist Santiago Ramon y Cajal in 1899 A denotes Purkinje cells and B denotes granule cells both of which are multipolar The neuron doctrine is the now fundamental idea that neurons are the basic structural and functional units of the nervous system The theory was put forward by Santiago Ramon y Cajal in the late 19th century It held that neurons are discrete cells not connected in a meshwork acting as metabolically distinct units Later discoveries yielded refinements to the doctrine For example glial cells which are non neuronal play an essential role in information processing 54 Also electrical synapses are more common than previously thought 55 comprising direct cytoplasmic connections between neurons In fact neurons can form even tighter couplings the squid giant axon arises from the fusion of multiple axons 56 Ramon y Cajal also postulated the Law of Dynamic Polarization which states that a neuron receives signals at its dendrites and cell body and transmits them as action potentials along the axon in one direction away from the cell body 57 The Law of Dynamic Polarization has important exceptions dendrites can serve as synaptic output sites of neurons 58 and axons can receive synaptic inputs 59 Compartmental modelling of neurons edit Although neurons are often described of as fundamental units of the brain they perform internal computations Neurons integrate input within dendrites and this complexity is lost in models that assume neurons to be a fundamental unit Dendritic branches can be modeled as spatial compartments whose activity is related due to passive membrane properties but may also be different depending on input from synapses Compartmental modelling of dendrites is especially helpful for understanding the behavior of neurons that are too small to record with electrodes as is the case for Drosophila melanogaster 60 Neurons in the brain editThe number of neurons in the brain varies dramatically from species to species 61 In a human there are an estimated 10 20 billion neurons in the cerebral cortex and 55 70 billion neurons in the cerebellum 62 By contrast the nematode worm Caenorhabditis elegans has just 302 neurons making it an ideal model organism as scientists have been able to map all of its neurons The fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster a common subject in biological experiments has around 100 000 neurons and exhibits many complex behaviors Many properties of neurons from the type of neurotransmitters used to ion channel composition are maintained across species allowing scientists to study processes occurring in more complex organisms in much simpler experimental systems Neurological disorders editMain article Neurological disorders This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Neuron news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Charcot Marie Tooth disease CMT is a heterogeneous inherited disorder of nerves neuropathy that is characterized by loss of muscle tissue and touch sensation predominantly in the feet and legs extending to the hands and arms in advanced stages Presently incurable this disease is one of the most common inherited neurological disorders affecting 36 in 100 000 people 63 Alzheimer s disease AD also known simply as Alzheimer s is a neurodegenerative disease characterized by progressive cognitive deterioration together with declining activities of daily living and neuropsychiatric symptoms or behavioral changes 64 The most striking early symptom is loss of short term memory amnesia which usually manifests as minor forgetfulness that becomes steadily more pronounced with illness progression with relative preservation of older memories As the disorder progresses cognitive intellectual impairment extends to the domains of language aphasia skilled movements apraxia and recognition agnosia and functions such as decision making and planning become impaired 65 66 Parkinson s disease PD also known as Parkinsons is a degenerative disorder of the central nervous system that often impairs motor skills and speech 67 Parkinson s disease belongs to a group of conditions called movement disorders 68 It is characterized by muscle rigidity tremor a slowing of physical movement bradykinesia and in extreme cases a loss of physical movement akinesia The primary symptoms are the results of decreased stimulation of the motor cortex by the basal ganglia normally caused by the insufficient formation and action of dopamine which is produced in the dopaminergic neurons of the brain Secondary symptoms may include high level cognitive dysfunction and subtle language problems PD is both chronic and progressive Myasthenia gravis is a neuromuscular disease leading to fluctuating muscle weakness and fatigability during simple activities Weakness is typically caused by circulating antibodies that block acetylcholine receptors at the post synaptic neuromuscular junction inhibiting the stimulative effect of the neurotransmitter acetylcholine Myasthenia is treated with immunosuppressants cholinesterase inhibitors and in selected cases thymectomy Demyelination edit Further information Demyelinating disease nbsp Guillain Barre syndrome demyelinationDemyelination is the act of demyelinating or the loss of the myelin sheath insulating the nerves When myelin degrades conduction of signals along the nerve can be impaired or lost and the nerve eventually withers This leads to certain neurodegenerative disorders like multiple sclerosis and chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy Axonal degeneration edit Although most injury responses include a calcium influx signaling to promote resealing of severed parts axonal injuries initially lead to acute axonal degeneration which is the rapid separation of the proximal and distal ends occurring within 30 minutes of injury 69 Degeneration follows with swelling of the axolemma and eventually leads to bead like formation Granular disintegration of the axonal cytoskeleton and inner organelles occurs after axolemma degradation Early changes include accumulation of mitochondria in the paranodal regions at the site of injury Endoplasmic reticulum degrades and mitochondria swell up and eventually disintegrate The disintegration is dependent on ubiquitin and calpain proteases caused by the influx of calcium ion suggesting that axonal degeneration is an active process that produces complete fragmentation The process takes about roughly 24 hours in the PNS and longer in the CNS The signaling pathways leading to axolemma degeneration are unknown Neurogenesis editMain article Neurogenesis Neurons are born through the process of neurogenesis in which neural stem cells divide to produce differentiated neurons Once fully differentiated neurons are formed they are no longer capable of undergoing mitosis Neurogenesis primarily occurs in the embryo of most organisms Adult neurogenesis can occur and studies of the age of human neurons suggest that this process occurs only for a minority of cells and that the vast majority of neurons in the neocortex forms before birth and persists without replacement The extent to which adult neurogenesis exists in humans and its contribution to cognition are controversial with conflicting reports published in 2018 70 The body contains a variety of stem cell types that have the capacity to differentiate into neurons Researchers found a way to transform human skin cells into nerve cells using transdifferentiation in which cells are forced to adopt new identities 71 During neurogenesis in the mammalian brain progenitor and stem cells progress from proliferative divisions to differentiative divisions This progression leads to the neurons and glia that populate cortical layers Epigenetic modifications play a key role in regulating gene expression in differentiating neural stem cells and are critical for cell fate determination in the developing and adult mammalian brain Epigenetic modifications include DNA cytosine methylation to form 5 methylcytosine and 5 methylcytosine demethylation 72 These modifications are critical for cell fate determination in the developing and adult mammalian brain DNA cytosine methylation is catalyzed by DNA methyltransferases DNMTs Methylcytosine demethylation is catalyzed in several stages by TET enzymes that carry out oxidative reactions e g 5 methylcytosine to 5 hydroxymethylcytosine and enzymes of the DNA base excision repair BER pathway 72 At different stages of mammalian nervous system development two DNA repair processes are employed in the repair of DNA double strand breaks These pathways are homologous recombinational repair used in proliferating neural precursor cells and non homologous end joining used mainly at later developmental stages 73 Intercellular communication between developing neurons and microglia is also indispensable for proper neurogenesis and brain development 74 Nerve regeneration editMain article Neuroregeneration Peripheral axons can regrow if they are severed 75 but one neuron cannot be functionally replaced by one of another type Llinas law 22 See also editArtificial neuron Bidirectional cell Biological neuron model Compartmental neuron models Connectome Dogiel cell List of animals by number of neurons List of neuroscience databases Neuronal galvanotropism Neuroplasticity Growth cone Sholl analysisReferences edit Stepwise emergence of the neuronal gene expression program in early animal evolution Cell Zayia LC Tadi P Neuroanatomy Motor Neuron Updated 2022 Jul 25 In StatPearls Internet Treasure Island FL StatPearls Publishing 2023 Jan Available from https www ncbi nlm nih gov books NBK554616 a b Zedalis J and Eggebrecht J 2018 Mar 8 Biology for AP Courses 26 1 Neurons and Glial Cells OpenStax https openstax org books biology ap courses pages 26 1 neurons and glial cells Accessed 2023 Aug 15 Moore Keith Dalley Arthur 2005 Clinically Oriented Anatomy 5th ed LWW pp 47 ISBN 0 7817 3639 0 A bundle of nerve fibers axons connecting neighboring or distant nuclei of the CNS is a tract What are the parts of the nervous system October 2018 Retrieved 2022 07 08 Davies Melissa 2002 04 09 The Neuron size comparison Neuroscience A journey through the brain Retrieved 2009 06 20 Chudler EH Brain Facts and Figures Neuroscience for Kids Retrieved 2009 06 20 16 7 Nervous System Biology LibreTexts 2021 01 14 Retrieved 2022 02 28 Herrup K Yang Y May 2007 Cell cycle regulation in the postmitotic neuron oxymoron or new biology Nature Reviews Neuroscience 8 5 368 78 doi 10 1038 nrn2124 PMID 17453017 S2CID 12908713 Gimenez C February 1998 Composition and structure of the neuronal membrane molecular basis of its physiology and pathology Revista de Neurologia 26 150 232 239 ISSN 0210 0010 PMID 9563093 State Hospitals Bulletin State Commission in Lunacy 1897 p 378 Medical Definition of Neurotubules www merriam webster com Zecca L Gallorini M Schunemann V Trautwein AX Gerlach M Riederer P Vezzoni P Tampellini D March 2001 Iron neuromelanin and ferritin content in the substantia nigra of normal subjects at different ages consequences for iron storage and neurodegenerative processes Journal of Neurochemistry 76 6 1766 73 doi 10 1046 j 1471 4159 2001 00186 x PMID 11259494 S2CID 31301135 Herrero MT Hirsch EC Kastner A Luquin MR Javoy Agid F Gonzalo LM Obeso JA Agid Y 1993 Neuromelanin accumulation with age in catecholaminergic neurons from Macaca fascicularis brainstem Developmental Neuroscience 15 1 37 48 doi 10 1159 000111315 PMID 7505739 Brunk UT Terman A September 2002 Lipofuscin mechanisms of age related accumulation and influence on cell function Free Radical Biology amp Medicine 33 5 611 9 doi 10 1016 s0891 5849 02 00959 0 PMID 12208347 Zhao B Meka DP Scharrenberg R Konig T Schwanke B Kobler O Windhorst S Kreutz MR Mikhaylova M Calderon de Anda F August 2017 Microtubules Modulate F actin Dynamics during Neuronal Polarization Scientific Reports 7 1 9583 Bibcode 2017NatSR 7 9583Z doi 10 1038 s41598 017 09832 8 PMC 5575062 PMID 28851982 Lee WC Huang H Feng G Sanes JR Brown EN So PT Nedivi E February 2006 Dynamic remodeling of dendritic arbors in GABAergic interneurons of adult visual cortex PLOS Biology 4 2 e29 doi 10 1371 journal pbio 0040029 PMC 1318477 PMID 16366735 Al Martini Frederic Et 2005 Anatomy and Physiology 2007 Ed 2007 Edition Rex Bookstore Inc p 288 ISBN 978 971 23 4807 5 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link nbsp This article incorporates text available under the CC BY 4 0 license Betts J Gordon Desaix Peter Johnson Eddie Johnson Jody E Korol Oksana Kruse Dean Poe Brandon Wise James Womble Mark D Young Kelly A June 8 2023 Anatomy amp Physiology Houston OpenStax CNX 12 2 Nervous tissue ISBN 978 1 947172 04 3 Gerber U January 2003 Metabotropic glutamate receptors in vertebrate retina Documenta Ophthalmologica Advances in Ophthalmology 106 1 83 7 doi 10 1023 A 1022477203420 PMID 12675489 S2CID 22296630 Wilson NR Runyan CA Wang FL Sur M August 2012 Division and subtraction by distinct cortical inhibitory networks in vivo Nature 488 7411 343 8 Bibcode 2012Natur 488 343W doi 10 1038 nature11347 hdl 1721 1 92709 PMC 3653570 PMID 22878717 a b Llinas RR 2014 01 01 Intrinsic electrical properties of mammalian neurons and CNS function a historical perspective Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience 8 320 doi 10 3389 fncel 2014 00320 PMC 4219458 PMID 25408634 Kolodin YO Veselovskaia NN Veselovsky NS Fedulova SA Ion conductances related to shaping the repetitive firing in rat retinal ganglion cells Acta Physiologica Congress Archived from the original on 2012 10 07 Retrieved 2009 06 20 Ionic conductances underlying excitability in tonically firing retinal ganglion cells of adult rat Ykolodin 50webs com 2008 04 27 Retrieved 2013 02 16 Scammell TE Jackson AC Franks NP Wisden W Dauvilliers Y January 2019 Histamine neural circuits and new medications Sleep 42 1 doi 10 1093 sleep zsy183 PMC 6335869 PMID 30239935 Patch seq technique helps depict the variation of neural cells in the brain News medical net 3 December 2020 Retrieved 26 August 2021 Science AAAS BRAIN CELL CENSUS Retrieved 2023 10 17 Macpherson Gordon 2002 Black s Medical Dictionary 40 ed Lanham MD Scarecrow Press pp 431 434 ISBN 0810849844 Ivannikov MV Macleod GT June 2013 Mitochondrial free Ca levels and their 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mechanical interactions in the brain Nature 24 November 2021 doi 10 1038 d41586 021 03516 0 Retrieved 21 February 2022 Researchers discover new type of cellular communication in the brain The Scripps Research Institute Retrieved 12 February 2022 Schiapparelli Lucio M Sharma Pranav He Hai Yan Li Jianli Shah Sahil H McClatchy Daniel B Ma Yuanhui Liu Han Hsuan Goldberg Jeffrey L Yates John R Cline Hollis T 25 January 2022 Proteomic screen reveals diverse protein transport between connected neurons in the visual system Cell Reports 38 4 110287 doi 10 1016 j celrep 2021 110287 ISSN 2211 1247 PMC 8906846 PMID 35081342 Levitan Irwin B Kaczmarek Leonard K 2015 Electrical Signaling in Neurons The Neuron Oxford University Press pp 41 62 doi 10 1093 med 9780199773893 003 0003 ISBN 978 0 19 977389 3 O Leary Olivia F Ogbonnaya Ebere S Felice Daniela Levone Brunno R C Conroy Lorraine Fitzgerald Patrick Bravo Javier A Forsythe Paul Bienenstock John Dinan Timothy G Cryan John F 1 February 2018 The 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for either axons or dendrites undergoing anastomosis and forming nets He called each nervous element an absolutely autonomous canton a b Oxford English Dictionary 3rd edition 2003 s v Mehta AR Mehta PR Anderson SP MacKinnon BL Compston A January 2020 Grey Matter Etymology and the neuron e Brain 143 1 374 379 doi 10 1093 brain awz367 PMC 6935745 PMID 31844876 Google Books Ngram Viewer books google com Retrieved 19 December 2020 a b c d Lopez Munoz F Boya J Alamo C October 2006 Neuron theory the cornerstone of neuroscience on the centenary of the Nobel Prize award to Santiago Ramon y Cajal Brain Research Bulletin 70 4 6 391 405 doi 10 1016 j brainresbull 2006 07 010 PMID 17027775 S2CID 11273256 Finger Stanley 1994 Origins of neuroscience a history of explorations into brain function Oxford University Press p 47 ISBN 9780195146943 OCLC 27151391 a man who would write a highly influential review of the evidence in favor of the neuron doctrine two years later In his paper Waldeyer 1891 wrote that nerve cells terminate freely with end arborizations and that the neuron is the anatomical and physiological unit of the nervous system The word neuron was born this way Whonamedit dictionary of medical eponyms www whonamedit com Today Wilhelm von Waldeyer Hartz is remembered as the founder of the neurone theory coining the term neurone to describe the cellular function unit of the nervous system and enunciating and clarifying that concept in 1891 Grant G October 2007 How the 1906 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine was shared between Golgi and Cajal Brain Research Reviews 55 2 490 8 doi 10 1016 j brainresrev 2006 11 004 PMID 17306375 S2CID 24331507 Witcher MR Kirov SA Harris KM January 2007 Plasticity of perisynaptic astroglia during synaptogenesis in the mature rat hippocampus Glia 55 1 13 23 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 598 7002 doi 10 1002 glia 20415 PMID 17001633 S2CID 10664003 Connors BW Long MA 2004 Electrical synapses in the mammalian brain Annual Review of Neuroscience 27 1 393 418 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LaFerla FM January 2010 Alzheimer s disease The New England Journal of Medicine 362 4 329 44 doi 10 1056 NEJMra0909142 PMID 20107219 S2CID 205115756 Parkinson s Disease Information Page NINDS 30 June 2016 Archived from the original on 4 January 2017 Retrieved 18 July 2016 Movement Disorders The International Neuromodulation Society Kerschensteiner M Schwab ME Lichtman JW Misgeld T May 2005 In vivo imaging of axonal degeneration and regeneration in the injured spinal cord Nature Medicine 11 5 572 7 doi 10 1038 nm1229 PMID 15821747 S2CID 25287010 Kempermann G Gage FH Aigner L Song H Curtis MA Thuret S Kuhn HG Jessberger S Frankland PW Cameron HA Gould E Hen R Abrous DN Toni N Schinder AF Zhao X Lucassen PJ Frisen J July 2018 Human Adult Neurogenesis Evidence and Remaining Questions Cell Stem Cell 23 1 25 30 doi 10 1016 j stem 2018 04 004 PMC 6035081 PMID 29681514 Callaway Ewen 26 May 2011 How to make a human neuron Nature doi 10 1038 news 2011 328 By transforming cells from human skin into working nerve cells researchers may have come up with a model for nervous system diseases and perhaps even regenerative therapies based on cell transplants The achievement reported online today in Nature is the latest in a fast moving field called transdifferentiation in which cells are forced to adopt new identities In the past year researchers have converted connective tissue cells found in skin into heart cells blood cells and liver cells a b Wang Z Tang B He Y Jin P March 2016 DNA methylation dynamics in neurogenesis Epigenomics 8 3 401 14 doi 10 2217 epi 15 119 PMC 4864063 PMID 26950681 Orii KE Lee Y Kondo N McKinnon PJ June 2006 Selective utilization of nonhomologous end joining and homologous recombination DNA repair pathways during nervous system development Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 103 26 10017 22 Bibcode 2006PNAS 10310017O doi 10 1073 pnas 0602436103 PMC 1502498 PMID 16777961 Cserep Csaba Schwarcz Anett D Posfai Balazs Laszlo Zsofia I Kellermayer Anna Kornyei Zsuzsanna Kisfali Mate Nyerges Miklos Lele Zsolt Katona Istvan September 2022 Microglial control of neuronal development via somatic purinergic junctions Cell Reports 40 12 111369 doi 10 1016 j celrep 2022 111369 PMC 9513806 PMID 36130488 S2CID 252416407 Yiu G He Z August 2006 Glial inhibition of CNS axon regeneration Nature Reviews Neuroscience 7 8 617 27 doi 10 1038 nrn1956 PMC 2693386 PMID 16858390 Further reading editBullock TH Bennett MV Johnston D Josephson R Marder E Fields RD November 2005 Neuroscience The neuron doctrine redux Science 310 5749 791 3 doi 10 1126 science 1114394 PMID 16272104 S2CID 170670241 Kandel ER Schwartz JH Jessell TM 2000 Principles of Neural Science 4th ed New York McGraw Hill ISBN 0 8385 7701 6 Peters A Palay SL Webster HS 1991 The Fine Structure of the Nervous System 3rd ed New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 506571 9 Ramon y Cajal S 1933 Histology 10th ed Baltimore Wood Roberts A Bush BM 1981 Neurones without Impulses Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 29935 7 Snell RS 2010 Clinical Neuroanatomy Lippincott Williams amp Wilkins ISBN 978 0 7817 9427 5 External links editNeuron at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Definitions from Wiktionary nbsp Media from Commons nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Textbooks from Wikibooks nbsp Data from Wikidata Neurobiology at Curlie IBRO International Brain Research Organization Fostering neuroscience research especially in less well funded countries NeuronBank an online neuromics tool for cataloging neuronal types and synaptic connectivity High Resolution Neuroanatomical Images of Primate and Non Primate Brains The Department of Neuroscience at Wikiversity which presently offers two courses Fundamentals of Neuroscience and Comparative Neuroscience NIF Search Neuron Archived 2015 01 22 at the Wayback Machine via the Neuroscience Information Framework Cell Centered Database Neuron Complete list of neuron types according to the Petilla convention at NeuroLex NeuroMorpho Org an online database of digital reconstructions of neuronal morphology Immunohistochemistry Image Gallery Neuron Khan Academy Anatomy of a neuron Neuron images Portals nbsp Biology nbsp Medicine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Neuron amp oldid 1207043246, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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